6/4/2023 0 Comments Sometimes i lie book reviewAnd while they’re mostly very well done, it just became a bit too much for me. The mystery was intriguing to start with, but at some point I guess I kind of lost interest. So what is she really remembering, what is she possibly making up (intentionally or not) – what, in short, is real? We know that Amber is an unreliable narrator because that’s literally one of the very first things she tells us: “Sometimes I lie.” And then there’s the added confusion of the coma. So, there’s a “now” timeline with Amber in hospital, there’s a “then” timeline which covers the week (or so) before she lands in hospital, and there’s an even older “then” timeline from the early 1990s. She can hear what’s being said in her room and starts to try and piece together what happened from what she can remember and what is being said by her visitors and the hospital staff. This was a well-written book, and should by all rights be a 4 star review, but for me personally it just wasn’t that engaging, which is a personal preference thing, but that’s what I’m writing about – so it only gets a 3.Ī very brief summary of the story, as it’s rife with twists and I don’t want to give anything away: Amber is in a coma, and she doesn’t know how she ended up there. Audible version, narrated by Stephanie Racine.
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